The spectacle of a Department of Justice hearing has long been a theater of the absurd, but the recent confrontation between Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett and Attorney General Pam Bondi reached a level of institutional decay that is hard to overstate. It was a masterclass in the erosion of American civic standards, where the person charged with upholding the highest laws of the land sat in stony, calculated silence while the very foundations of morality and legal accountability were dismantled in front of her. We are witnessing the death of the “witness” and the birth of a protected class of political elites who believe they are above the basic requirement of answering to the people.

Crockett’s refusal to even engage in the charade of questioning Bondi was perhaps the most honest moment in Congressional history. Why bother? Why waste taxpayer time on a witness who has signaled from the jump that she has no intention of providing anything resembling a factual response? Instead, Crockett turned to her colleague, Becca Balant, to establish a baseline for human decency—asking if raping children, killing citizens, or enriching oneself through the presidency is “right or wrong.” These are the questions we now have to ask in the halls of power because the leadership of the DOJ seemingly can no longer distinguish between a criminal enterprise and a government agency.
The most damning indictment of the entire hearing wasn’t even the words spoken; it was the silence. When the Attorney General of the United States refuses to answer basic moral queries, the silence isn’t neutral—it’s an admission of complicity. Bondi, a lawyer who supposedly understands the mechanics of a courtroom, sat there like a statue while survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s horrific crimes watched from the gallery. To ignore these women, to refuse to even acknowledge their presence while claiming to lead a department dedicated to “justice,” is a level of hypocrisy that borders on the sociopathic.
The Department of Justice, under this leadership, has become a weaponized tool for the powerful and a shield for the “creeps and pedophiles” Crockett so pointedly referenced. While the DOJ stays busy raiding the homes of journalists like Don Lemon and Georgia Fort—arresting them for the “crime” of reporting things the administration finds inconvenient—real monsters remain unprosecuted. It is a staggering inversion of duty. We are watching a department that spends more resources hunting down the First Amendment than it does hunting down human traffickers.

The Epstein Files: A Record of Cowardice
Crockett didn’t just lob insults; she brought the receipts. She placed into the record the staggering reality of Donald Trump’s connection to the Epstein files: 5,000 files with over 38,000 references to the former president, his wife, or Mar-a-Lago. She cited FBI notes describing Epstein bringing a victim to Trump’s estate, where Epstein allegedly bragged, “This is a good one.”
The response from the “law and order” side of the room? Crickets. Bondi’s eventually pivoted to a weak, “what-about-ism” deflection concerning Hakeem Jeffries, as if a campaign contribution somehow cancels out the documented, systemic involvement of a sitting president with a notorious pedophile. This is the hallmark of the modern DOJ: selective amnesia and strategic distraction. If the facts don’t fit the narrative of the boss, the facts simply don’t exist.
A Legacy of Obstruction
We are told that the mission of the DOJ is to return to its “core mission” and end “weaponization.” Yet, the reality is a litany of failures and constitutional violations. From seizing voter data in Fulton County to attempting to hand the president a $230 million unconstitutional “payday,” the department is functioning as a private law firm for a monarch, not a public service for a republic.
Bondi will indeed be remembered as one of the worst Attorney Generals in history, but not just for her incompetence. She will be remembered for the smugness of her silence. When a grand jury rejects your attempts to arrest political opponents like Senator Kelly or Senator Stabenow, and when your cases against Tish James and James Comey are laughed out of court, you aren’t a prosecutor—you’re a partisan hack with a badge.
The American people aren’t looking for political theater; they are looking for the basic assurance that the person at the top of the DOJ knows the difference between right and wrong. Based on this hearing, that is an assurance Pam Bondi is either unable or unwilling to give. The “laughingstock of the world” isn’t a hyperbolic phrase; it is a current status report. When kings and queens are falling elsewhere for far less, the United States is busy protecting the very corruption it claims to despise. It is a shameful display of fealty over loyalty, and a dark day for anyone who still believes in the rule of law.